CS Castle News September 4, 1985 COMMUNITY SCOUT REGISTRATION Beavers, 5-7 Years — Cubs, 8- 10 Years Scouts, 11. - 14 Years — Venturers, 14-17 Years Rovers, 17.- 23 Years Mon., Sept. 9, Castlegar Scout Hall Tues., Sept. 10, Kinnaird Hall Wed., Sept. 11, Blueberry Cr. School Thurs., Sept. 12, Robson Hall All registrations start at 7:30 p.m. and parents must register their children. Leaders desperately needed! FOR MORE INFORMATION PHONE 365-3787 or 365-5674 after 6 p.m. You Are ited To... PROPHECY SEMINAR SEMINAR: SEPTEMBER 8 - 13 SUNDAY — 8:15 ..m., 11:00 a.m. & 6 p.m. MONDAY - FRIDAY — 7:30 p.m. At the 5 Castlegar Pentecostal Tabernacle 767 - 11th Ave., Castlegar Prophecy Seminar With Evangelist LINFIELD CROWDER Well known Bible Prophecy Preacher. See you there or in the air! On Room Rate ~ with this Coupon WE FEATURE: © Kitchens ® Courtesy Van * Heated Pool * Continental Breakfast Jefferson House provides enjoyable, quiet. secure, comfortable lodging within 3 minutes from city centre. Advanced reservations required. Subject to space availability. Call for Reservations 112-509-624-4142 Offer expires Dec. 31. 1985. Not valid Sept. 25 10 Oct. 10, 1985 Jefferson Jtouse onitle, MOTOR INAS 38 Jetterson in Spokane HISTORICAL PHOTO . . . This photograph of a water wheel is the type used earlier in ping water from the river, and of Alexander Zuckerberg on his island. Anyone having any information as to the identity of the people shown in the photo, the approximate date WHO ARE THEY of the photo and any information on these water- wheels is asked to write or phone John Charters at * 931 7th Ave., Castlegar (365-5241) or Betty Price op Castlegar City Hall, 460 Columbia Ave. (365- Display train in Nelson CP Rail’s Community Cen- tennial Train, ‘carrying torical railway exhibits, dis- plays and a scale model of the’ railway's Rogers Pass Pro- ject, will arrive in Nelson Sept. 14. The display train will be located at the CP Rail Sta- tion, at the foot. of Baker Street. The train will be open to the public, free of charge on Sept. 14 and 15 from noon to 8 p.m. The Community Centen- nial Train will be on display this summer at various cities ~ and towns across Canada which aré celebrating their centennials in 1985 — 100 years after the arrival of the Canadian Pacific Railway. The train consists of four main display cars plus mod- ern railway equipment. ‘The four display cars are: Mount Stephen — An old director's car named Mount Stephen after George Ste- phen, the first. president (1881-88) of Canadian Pacific. The car, constructed.in 1926, was designated an historical car in 1971. It is one of the heaviest cars on the CP. Rail system, tipping the scales at 102 tons. Last Spike Display Car — Constructed as a specialized express car in 1947, this car has been outfitted as a mobile museum. Historical exhibits, railway displays, a photo- graphic gallery and a profile of CP Rail today gives visi- tors a brief look zt a century of railway history. Rogers Pass Display Car — This display illustrates the biggest challenge CP Rail has had to face since the building the railway 100 years ago — the Rogers Pass“ project. A scale model of the project, which includes a 14.7-kilo- metre tunnel through Mount MacDonald and Mount Che- ops, -Mguntain, is a prominent feattr@in the car along with displays and photographic illustrations of railway con- struction, work camps and CP Rail's reforestation pro- gram. Diesel Locomotive 8000 — CP Rail's first road dieSel fellt consisted of 13 DRS-10a locomotives numbered from 8000 to 8012. Built by Bald- win Locomotive Works in Philadelphia, Pa., they were assigned to the Esquimalt and Nariaimo Railway on Vancouver Island. These locomotives spent their wor- king careers in British Col- umbia and were retired be- tween 1973 and. 1975. Nos. 8001-8012 were scrap- ped, but No. 8000 — CP Rail's first road diesel — was pre- served for historical reasons. Funeral held for Ootischenia man Mike M. Markin, husband of Mable Markin of Ootis- chenia, passed away Friday, Aug. 30 in Kelowna General Hospital at, the age of 68. Funeral service was_held Monday at the Castlegar USCC and enjoyed garden- ing. : Besides his wife, he is survived by one son, Harry of ia; one New books at Castlegar library By JUDY WEARMOUTH % Librarian The phenomenon of mul- tiple personality has fas- inated readers since The Three Faces of Eve was a bestseller. Now Prism, An- dreas’s World by Jonathon and Eugene Bliss, shows how medical knowledge on the subject has progress- ed. This is the true story of a woman who held a res ponsible job during the day and was torn apart by her 28 personalities. at night and weekends. After 10 years of searching for help, during which she was the victim of many hospitalizations- and useless drug therapy, she was referred to Dr. Bliss, an expert on multiple personality cases. He discovered she was still experiencing the terrors of a sexually abused childhood and had developed an obsessive need to punish herself for her supposed guilt. Andrea and her doctor describe her long slow road back to health’ as her many personalities are integrated into one viable human being. . The Guin teaaniee of Amelia Earhart and her navi- gator Fred Noonan during their round the world flight on Suly 2, 1937, remains one of the greatest mysteries of the century. A USAF commanding- officer stationed in the Pacific found a plane wreck; seemingly hidden on a remote atoll in the Marshall Islands. Vincent Loomis was convinced this was the wreck of Amelia Earhart’s plane and he was determined to solve the mystery once and for all. His investigation and search lasted for years, and in Amelia Earhart, the Final Story, he reconstructs her final flight through interviews and records and dramatizes convincingly what happened to this intrepid woman over 45 years ago- = - . * oe A Bridge Through Time by Laila Said, is the remarkable memoir of an Egyptian woman who escaped from centuries of tradition to become a modern woman in a modern world. She managed to postpone an arranged marriage by begging her father for time to study in America. There_she experienced her first taste of freedom which naturally spoilt her for the traditional role of a subservient wife which she was expected to resume on her return to Egypt. Divorced, and with her personal life in chaos as a result of this socially disastrous step, she returned to ‘America where she obtained a doctorate in theatre and fell in love for the first time. Once again duty called her back to Egypt where she found her own stage company, only to have it taken away from her for political reasons. Her present life in her homeland is filled with conflict as she is considered “tainted” by her Western experience, and the way she solves her problems makes fascinating reading. ‘ - - The designer Mary Gilliatt feels that children’s rooms should be as attractive and imaginative as they are safe Patsy Naychuk of Castlegar: and six grandchildren. He was by his fath- and ical. In Rooms for Children, she gives inspiration and advice to help you plan and equip rooms which create a but safe ‘ is atone | VANCOUVER ea HAH WINCH == ae Funeral Chapet-and-contin- -ued--Tuesday--at-the Ootis- chenia Russian Hall, with burial in the Ootischenia Cemetery. . Mr. Markin was born Aug. 4, 1917 at Glade and moved to Ootischenia with his parents asa young boy. He married _Mable Astoforoff at Brilliant On March 21,-1940- Mr. Markin worked for the CPR for 25 years and due to ill health was forced to retire early. He was member of the er, mother and two sisters. Whether-you're-starting from scratch to design Fugeral arrangements were under the direction of the Castlegar Funeral Cha- pel. < Free | Church breakfast The Evangelical Free Chu- rch will be having its tradi- tional pancake breakfast at 9:30 a.m., Sunday The breakfast is a time for parents and Sunday School students to meet their tea- oe nee what they will be crinkly “phil will be used. This is the first breakast in the Evangelisal Free Chu- reh’s new building. There is hich-will-g ith-a-child; wnUrsEery into a teenage room, or dividing a room for a second child, this book will give you confidence to start on the project. * . 8 What makes some marriages rich and lasting, despite setbacks, and problems, and 6ther “good marriages-fall aprt? In Married People, Staying Together in the Age of Divorce, Francine Klagsbrun: draws on dozens of revealing interviews with successful couples to offer fresh insight into this subject of universal interest. She challenges other experts in the field.with perceptive views on people's capacity for change, the influence of friends and family on a couple, and competition between spouses. She's a strong advocate for marriage. Instead of quick fixes, she presents lasting insights that can make a lifetime of difference. 2 - . oe Still on the subject of marriage, The Marital Arts, by syndicated columnist Arthur Hopper, is a more light- hearted approach to the real nature of matrimony. He warns that a’spouse should be selected for qualities of tolerance “and endurance. He feels that grounds for | divorce” should ‘be-limited to the seven marital sins, i (eg. a dieting spouse parading virtue in the face of cheesecake); Undaunted” cheerfulness (saying ‘have a nice day on Monday no charge for the and all are welcome. Dress is informal. coming! mornings); U honesty (‘You're right, you are putting on weight). BUSINESS ATCO AFTER DEFENCE . BUSINESS | CALGARY (CP) — Atco Ltd. of Calgary, best known for its mobile housing and energy operations, is making a foray, into the defence business with a well as develop new defence-criented goods, said Southern. The Beta project began about eight months ago when Atco’s other businesses, hurt by the recession, were nearly idle. ARMY ENTHUSIASTIC Atco hopes to have contraets worth up to $50 million. within two years. Canadian and British military offi ficers who have seen the p! ype have been said Southern, but so far there has been ng-contact with the tank replica it hopes 'to sell to armies for use as a target. The sprawling conglomerate, which reported $1.6 billion in revenues for the year ending March 31, recently officially unveiled the project — code-named Beta — for reporters. But it had not been much of a secret in Calgary. * Despite ‘attempts to keep the project ‘quiet, the prototype, a replica of a Soviet T-72 tank, had been spotted travelling at an abandoned military airstrip adjacent to Atco’s fabrication plant. ‘The growing curiosity prompted Ron Southern, Atco deputy chairman and chief executive officer, to unveil the project. The Beta project will be the first for a new Atco subsidiary named CATS, a jumbled acronym taken from the name Atco and Canadian Utilities Ltd., another subsidiary which is part of the venture. ’ CATS will market some of Atco’s current products — such as its mobile industrial camps — to the military, as defence departr of either country. Atco's main itor is Saab-S; , the ish manufacturing giant, which makes. the system now in widest use, said Southern. s Atco’s. system will be an improvement, said Southern. The targets now used to train tank crews are either fixed plywood silhouettes or mockups which move on rails, shooting-gallery style. The Beta system will be able to simulate battlefield conditions because it can move like a real tank. In simple terms, it's a full-size version of a child's radio-controlled toy. Once development is completed in four. to six months, Southern said the phoney tanks will be able to conduct simulated attacks in groups, using laser devices to shoot ‘at defending units. The defenders will be able to shoot back with lasers — registering hits ly — or live Southern said the cost of the targets will be cheap enough that they can be destroyed in the simulated battles. IN AUTO INDUSTRY We Open Over 300,000 Doors in the West and Toronto.